The Redevelopment Agency will meet at 4:30 p.m.in the City Council chamber on the third floor of City Hall, 355 Main St.

The City Council will meet at 6 p.m. in the same room.

Sale of the properties, which include 1.14 acres at 16 Elm St.; 0.5 acre at 70 Water St.; 7 Richards Place; and 3 Richard Place will net the city a total of $402,500 — coming at the very end of the fiscal year when the city’s finances are at their tightest.

The four properties are being sold for $250,000 for 16 Elm St.; $110,000 for 70 Water St.; $21,500 for 7 Richards Place; and $21,000 for 3 Richards Place, according to information released by the city.

They will join the 4.13-acre 105 Water St. parcel that was sold to The Haven Group LLC of Dallas on June 23, 2015.

The agendas and other information released Tuesday did not divulge the nature of the amendment to the development agreement.

The Redevelopment Agency agenda lists a “presentation by Attorney O’Connor regarding the proposed Second Amendment to the Development Agreement by and between the City of West Haven, the West Haven Redevelopment Agency and the Haven Group, LLC.”

It also lists “action by the West Haven Redevelopment Agency for consideration and approval of the proposed Second Amendment to the Development Agreement by and between the City of West Haven, the West Haven Redevelopment Agency and the Haven Group, LLC.”

The City Council agenda listed the same presentation as well as a presentation “regarding the proposed Land Disposition Agreement for 70 Water St., 3 Richards Place and 7 Richards Place” and a separate presentation on the proposed land disposition agreement for 16 Elm St., as well as action on all three items.

Developers Sheldon Gordon and Ty Miller have proposed to build the $200 million, 347,826-square-foot waterfront development project in two phases, with about 60 stores and seven restaurants in the first phase and about 100 stores if both phases ultimately are built.

Armstrong told the City Council March 30 that The Haven would be the only direct-waterfront, luxury retail center in the country, with 60 stores, seven restaurants and a public waterfront promenade with a 200-seat amphitheater.

It would pay $2 million in annual property tax and create more than $15 million in incremental sales tax for the state, he said.

The Haven would provide 800 full-time and 400 part-time jobs, plus 800 construction jobs using all Connecticut-based contractors, he said. The developers had spent $15 million on the project as of that date, he said.